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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • I perused the comments and didn’t see anyone mention this. The term “engineer” is regulated by every state in the US. I doubt they had Tinder in mind, but calling yourself an “engineer” without having a Professional Engineer license is illegal, at least when it comes to offering professional engineering services. It’s a protected title so that schools and bridges don’t get built by scammers–at least that was the intention. I can legally call myself an Engineer!

    Just go get your license, and you should be golden lol.






  • FabledAepitaph@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlWarm Water Port Envy
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    5 months ago

    Hilariously, Texas is all about giving people the freedom to freeze to death with their substandard electrical service in the name of “freedom from government oppression”, but they can’t just let trans people decide to transition because it could be a mistake and they might regret it? All while supporting child labor where kids could get crushed or heinously injured in massive industrial equipments? Amazing.








  • I am new to Linux and never used it regularly before a couple months ago, but I’d recommend just going with Linux Mint to start off. I don’t know much about Arch, but from all the jokes I see on Lemmy, I get the impression it may be a more advanced distro for people who know what they’re doing? I wanted to try PopOS! because people said it was good for gaming, but the install wasn’t as streamlined for a dual boot Windows/Linux setup.

    Linux Mint just kind of works and installed super fast. And my Windows partition is still intact and functional (but I’m wondering if I even need it tbh). My only holdup is Microsoft Office. I still haven’t tried to get that working inside of Linux, but if it’s possible, then I will certainly delete my Windows install.

    But anyways, don’t over think it. Just do Linux Mint and then after a while, you’ll be able to understand why or if you should consider another distro I would guess!


  • I switched to Linux Mint on my personal computer because I wasn’t happy with Windows 11 on my work computer. But honestly, after having time to consider the big picture, I think what I disliked the most was being arbitrarily forced into OS updates which didn’t really seem to benefit me at all. And which would eventually lead to the software-based obsolescence of my hardware.

    After I’d installed Mint, I was browsing for new desktop themes. I noticed that some of them were up to seven years old, and they still worked just fine, were compatible, and felt modern. And that’s exactly what I want: if I don’t feel like changing my desktop theme for seven or ten years, I will be infinitely more able to do that with Linux than with Windows. I have other things to worry about than keeping up with whatever Microsoft or the computer hardware manufacturers are expecting me to do.

    It’s kinda glorious to think about, tbh.


  • I play mosty either indy games or just older games on an older gaming laptop (geforce 1070m based HP Omen) and Steam/Linux Mint work pretty great. Outer Wilds works even better in Linux now that I’ve begun using CoreCtrl to disable CPU power throttling. Otherwise, it runs about like it did on Windows. The MCC runs flawlessly. Recently purchased No Man’s Sky and it runs pretty well and is actually incredibly smooth–no idea how that one runs in Windows because I’ve been just using Linux full-time for maybe two months now.

    There is some weirdness like having to process Vulcan Shades before games boot up which can be annoying, but it hasn’t discouraged me yet. You can also skip that and the only difference is there might be a bit of stuttering for the first bit of game play. After going back to Windows to compare performance, I think it does this stuttering thing anyways?